Michel Sulaiman Elected
President of Lebanon
Beirut, May 25, 2008 (RNA) –
The Lebanonese parliament elected on Sunday
the army Commander, General Michel Sulaiman, as a president with 118
votes of 127.
The vote has been postponed 19 times since November amid an 18-month
political crisis between the government and the Hizbullah-led
opposition.
Sulaiman has good ties with both sides of the political leaders in
Lebanon, which enabled him to gain the majority of Lebanese
parliamentarians' votes.
The election followed an agreement Wednesday brokered by Arab mediators
in Qatar to tackle election laws, a unity government, and the status of
Hizbullah's weapons.
Former Lebanese President Emile Lahoud stepped down in November, leaving
an empty president place.
Lebanese MPs Gather to Elect Sulaiman
as President
Hanan Awarekeh Readers Number : 397
Al-Manar,
25/05/2008
Lebanese lawmakers gathered to elect army
Chief Michel Sulaiman as president on Sunday in a first step towards
ending a crippling political crisis and ending the term of the vacant
presidency seat.
Parliament convened amid tight security to vote in a much-delayed
session being attended by 200 guests including Arab and Western
dignitaries, following a deal hammered out Wednesday in Qatar between
rival Lebanese politicians.
Parliament will hold two sessions today – the first to elect a President
and the second to be devoted to oath-taking – and Parliament Speaker
Nabih Berri will set a date for another session to approve electoral law
amendment.
Presidency seat has been vacant since Emile Lahoud's term ended in
November, and 19 previous attempts to get lawmakers together to elect a
successor failed. Last Wednesday, the feuding sides finally agreed to
elect Suleiman and form a national unity government, after five days of
talks brokered by the Arab League in the Qatari capital.
Qatari emir Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, Arab League Secretary
General Amr Moussa and a U.S. congressional delegation arrived in Beirut
to attend the election. The U.S. delegation is headed by Representative
Nick Rahall, a West Virginia Democrat of Lebanese origin. The foreign
ministers of Syria, Iran, Saudi, Italy and France are also among the 200
notables invited and they arrived in the Lebanese capital to witness the
event.
Emir Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani is due to address the 128-seat
parliament on Sunday, and other guests including Mussa who helped broker
the Doha accord.
"Attaining calm and security in this country is attaining calm and
security on the level of the region as a whole," Iranian Foreign
Minister Manouchehr Mottaki told reporters on arrival in Beirut.
Kuwait's Parliament Speaker Jassem al-Kharafi arrived at Beirut airport
and was received by Speaker Berri. Al-Kharafi said efforts would be
exerted to shepherd success of the Doha Accord.
French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner welcomed Sunday's vote, however
he said, "We would have wished for things to proceed more smoothly, more
democratically," Kouchner told reporters. "But this is Lebanon and we
are happy nonetheless.
In nearly 10 years at the helm of the army, Suleiman managed to stay out
of the political storm. But as president he will have to tread a fine
line to keep the peace with the same neutrality. "I cannot save the
country on my own," he told local media this week. "This mission
requires the efforts of all. Security is not achieved by force but joint
political will." A career soldier, Suleiman joined the army in 1967. He
was appointed military chief in December 1998. He is married and has
three children.
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